Revolution and Authoritarianism in North Africa
Frédéric Volpi
Reviews and Awards
"Volpi is clear to make a distinction between protest and revolution. Rather than emphasize any particular combination of long- and short-term causal factors to explain the origins of revolt and rebellion, Volpi instead draws attention to the importance of specific events in the moment and especially the response of institutional and political elites in determining whether stasis or change would prevail... Volpi provides a nuanced understanding of protest and revolution. His conclusions intended for political scientists and students of international relations should have applications far beyond the Middle East and North Africa. For their part historians of the Maghreb will benefit from Volpi's thick description of events." -- Jonathan G. Katz, Oregon State University
"Revolution and Authoritarianism looks beyond the deterministic approaches that have characterised studies of the Arab Spring and offers a much more nuanced set of explanations for the way in which events in North Africa have occurred and developed. Theoretically sophisticated and empirically well grounded, this is a genuine must-read for all those interested in the politics of the Arab Spring." -- Francesco Cavatorta, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Université Laval in Quebec, Canada; and editor of Salafism After the Arab Awakening: Contending with People's Power
"Precisely-argued and intelligent, this is the most important study to date of the comparative politics of the Arab uprisings in North Africa; it demonstrates in detail how eventful interactions between political actors in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya were not simply structurally determined, but shaped trajectories of change. Volpi shows how people do make history, even in circumstances not chosen by themselves." -- John Chalcraft, Associate Professor in the History and Politics of Empire/Imperialism and author of Popular Politics in the Making of the Modern Middle East
"This powerful account highlights the fluidity of revolutions, and of all politics, by looking at how institutions are made and unmade, especially through processes of meaning making. Volpi finds the right analytical balance between action and its contexts." -- James M. Jasper, Professor, Graduate Centre of the City University of New York
"Very good for advanced undergraduate seminars and graduate students."--Choice
"Volpi is clear to make a distinction between "protest" and "revolution." Rather than emphasize any particular combination of long- and short-term causal factors to explain the origins of revolt and rebellion, Volpi instead draws attention to the importance of specific events in the moment and especially the response of institutional and political elites in determining whether stasis or change would prevail.....Volpi provides a nuanced understanding of protest and revolution. His conclusions-intended for political scientists and students of international relations- should have applications far beyond the Middle East and North Africa. For their part historians of the Maghreb will benefit from Volpi's thick description of events." - JONATHAN G. KATZ, Oregon State University